Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2020685 Protein Expression and Purification 2012 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

PagP, a beta-barrel membrane protein found in Gram-negative bacteria, expresses robustly in inclusion bodies when its signal sequence is removed. We have developed a new fusion protein expression system based on PagP and demonstrated its utility in the expression of the unstructured N-terminal region of human cardiac troponin I (residues 1–71). A yield of 100 mg fusion protein per liter M9 minimal media was obtained. The troponin I fragment was removed from PagP using cyanogen bromide cleavage at methionine residues followed by nickel affinity chromatography. We further demonstrate that optimal cleavage requires complete reduction of methionine residues prior to cyanogen bromide treatment, and this is effectively accomplished using potassium iodide under acidic conditions. The PagP-based fusion protein system is more effective at targeting proteins into inclusion bodies than a commercially available system that uses ketosteroid isomerase; it thus represents an important advance for producing large quantities of unfolded peptides or proteins in Escherichia coli.

► We developed a fusion protein expression system based on the membrane protein, PagP. ► The new system shows improved expression and targeting to inclusion bodies. ► CNBr cleavage is improved by methionine residue reduction using potassium iodide.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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